10 essential points to consider when setting up a business in Australia
Starting your own business in Australia is exciting — but the key to success lies in careful planning. Here are 10 essential considerations before you launch.
Plain-English guides for Australian small business owners.
Starting your own business in Australia is exciting — but the key to success lies in careful planning. Here are 10 essential considerations before you launch.
Once you've decided on your business structure, the next step is to register it properly. Here's what each number means, when you need it, and how to keep it updated.
In Australian taxation, two essential numbers come into play: the ABN and the TFN. They may seem similar, but they serve very different purposes.
You don't need a formal 20-page plan to get started. But you do need to understand how your business will make money, who your customers are, and what your costs will be.
More businesses fail from poor cash flow management than from a bad product. You can be turning a profit on paper and still go bankrupt because the money isn't in your bank when your bill is due.
Before you register anything, there's one decision that shapes everything else — are you operating as the business, or is the business separate from you?
Cyber security is not just a technical issue — it's a business risk. If your data is lost or stolen, recovery can be costly and damaging. Here's how to protect yourself.
Running a business involves more than just accounting. Most of the work happens across communication, task tracking, and document management. Here's what to set up.
Before looking at what you can claim, it's important to understand the core rule: an expense is deductible if it is directly related to earning your income.
You cannot decide whether someone is an employee or a contractor based on what you call them. The classification depends on how the working relationship operates in practice.
FBT applies when you provide benefits to employees outside of salary. Before lodging, the key step is identifying whether any employee-related expenses create an FBT obligation.
Hiring without a clear plan often creates more problems than it solves. Before you post the job ad, make sure your business can actually support an employee.
Insurance is one of those things most business owners don't think about at the start. Until something goes wrong — a small mistake can quickly turn into a real cost.
Send the invoice on time, track what's unpaid, and follow up. Most late payments are solved with a simple follow-up — but only if you know they're overdue.
From 1 July 2026, super must be paid at the same time as wages instead of quarterly. Here's what you need to do before the change takes effect.
Once you hire an employee, paying them is not just a bank transfer. Each pay run involves tax, superannuation, and reporting to the ATO.
If you're running a business, your accountant will rely on the information you provide. The more complete and organised it is, the smoother the process will be.
Every invoice you send, every expense you pay — it all needs to be tracked. Because at some point, you'll need to report it to the ATO.
Most super problems come from timing, setup, and assumptions. Here are the most common mistakes employers make — and how to avoid them.
Super is a legal requirement for employers — not optional. Here's what you must pay, when you must pay it, and where businesses commonly get it wrong.
Australian taxes are complex — but understanding the basic concepts and definitions makes compliance easier. Here's what applies to you and when.
Tax management is a core part of running a business — not just about lodging returns, but about understanding how your income, expenses, and structure affect your financial position.
Insurance doesn't need to be extensive at the beginning. It needs to match the risks that already exist in your business — and those depend on how you operate.
You don't need to be an accountant to use financial statements — but you do need to understand what you're looking at. Here's what each report shows and why it matters.
Once your business is set up, you need to understand your tax obligations. Not because it's complicated — but because no one clearly explains what applies to you and when.
At the beginning, many business owners try to manage everything themselves. But as your business grows, things become more complex — and this is usually the point where support becomes valuable.
You don't need to be a tech startup to benefit from AI. Here are the five tools giving Australian SMEs a serious competitive edge.
You know what cash flow is and why it matters. Now let's talk about how to actually manage it — with three levers every small business owner should know, plus the tools that make it easier.
When it comes to the ATO and Fair Work, 'I didn't know' is not an acceptable defence. Here's what every Australian small business needs to have sorted in 2026.